Join us:
Screenings of the documentary "Just Getting By" and other events this fall at locations across the state.
See dates and times
See dates and times
In 2020 the typical Vermont household income dropped $8,000 from the previous year, to $66,902—below the U.S. median for the first time since 2007. But the state’s official poverty rate stayed steady at around 9 percent.
The economic impact of COVID-19 would have been worse were it not for substantial help from the federal government. In fact, by another measure poverty in Vermont fell during the pandemic. The state’s Supplemental Poverty Measure (SPM)—which includes tax credits, pandemic stimulus payments, and other government transfers that the official rate does not—decreased to 8.3 percent in 2020 from 9.4 percent in 2019.
The U.S. as a whole saw a similar drop in SPM in 2020. Both the national supplemental and official poverty rates have fallen since 2015.
*The pandemic disrupted data collection for 2019 and 2020. Public Assets typically uses information from the American Community Survey (ACS). But since 2020 ACS data are not available, the data here are from the Current Population Survey (CPS), which has a smaller sample size. More information here.
THIS MONTH
Vermont lost 1,300 jobs in August, bringing the state’s total to just under 300,000, still below the pre-pandemic mark. Several sectors lost jobs, but hotels and restaurants, hardest hit by the pandemic initially, saw their eighth straight month of growth.